In my
last article, I quoted 3
USC, Title 3, Chapter 1, Section 15 governing the convening of Congress
on January 6, 2009 to certify the vote of the Electoral College. On October
15, 2009, P.L. 110-430 was signed into law, changing the date set for
the convening on Congress in this matter, from January 6, 2009 to January
8, 2009. P.L.
110-430 has yet to be codified (added to the United States Code),
leaving people, including myself, confused about the conflicting dates
seen in numerous articles on the subject.

In my
last article, I put down, in succinct order, with as much clarity and
simplicity as possible, twenty undisputed facts of why Barry Soetoro (a/k/a,
Barack Hussein Obama) is not eligible to the office of president. I received
e-mails from many that these twenty undisputed facts, along with the supporting
evidence, were sent to U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives. U.S. Senators
and U.S. Representatives cannot claim ignorance of the facts.

A recent
AOL.com
poll shows that the American public is becoming increasingly concerned
with the prospect that Barry Soetoro (a/k/a, Barack Hussein Obama) is
not eligible to the office of president. With 108,503 votes registered,
all but three states — NY, CT and DC — show a majority of
those voting are concerned about Obama’s eligibility:

55%
saying yes, they are concerned;

39%
saying no, they are not concerned; and

6%
saying they aren’t sure whether they are concerned or not.

This,
of course, is not a scientific poll.

What
will Congress do on January 8, 2009?

Can
we take our cue of what Congress will do from a little publicized event
that happened on April 30, 2008 in the U.S. Senate?

On that
date, with little
to no discussion, the U.S. Senate, by unanimous vote (who all voted
is not a matter of record), passed Senate
Resolution 511. This resolution, sponsored by Senator Claire McCaskill
(D-MO), had five co-sponsors: Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Senator Barry
Soetoro (a/k/a Barack Hussein Obama) (D-IL), Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY),
Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK), and Senator Jim Webb (D-VA) who all signed
onto the bill as co-sponsors the day it was dropped, April 10, 2008. Amidst
a growing controversy of whether presidential candidate John McCain, III,
was a natural born citizen, and having been unable to pass legislation
that would have clearly made him so, the title of S.R. 511 was simply
“Recognizing that John Sidney McCain, III, is a natural born citizen.”

Understanding,
of course, that this Senate Resolution was nonbinding and had no force
of law, the Washington
Post reported the following:

Senators
sympathetic to McCain's position, including Democrats Claire McCaskill
(Mo.) and Patrick J. Leahy (Vt.), dropped an earlier attempt to quell
the eligibility controversy with legislation. McCaskill acknowledged
in an interview that there is "no way" to completely resolve
the question short of a constitutional amendment, a cumbersome process
which could not be concluded before November.

She
described the nonbinding resolution, which she sponsored, as "the
quickest, clearest and most efficient" way for the Senate to send
a message to the courts that McCain has the right to be president.

In the
mix of co-sponsors on this bill, you will find two other presidential
contenders: Barry Soetoro (a/k/a Barack Hussein Obama) and Hillary Clinton.
These senators were sympathetic to McCain’s position? Is this the
message Congress also wanted to send to the courts with regard to Barry
Soetoro, a/k/a Barack Hussein Obama?

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Should
we be surprised if Congress ignores the undisputed facts concerning Barry
Soetoro (a/k/a Barack Hussein Obama) and votes to certify the Electoral
College on January 8, 2009, officially certifying a usurper to the office
of president?

Activist and researcher, Stuter
has spent the last fifteen years researching systems theory and systems
philosophy with a particular emphasis on education as it pertains to achieving
the sustainable global environment. She home schooled two daughters. She
has worked with legislators, both state and federal, on issues pertaining
to systems governance, the sustainable global environment and education
reform. She networks nationwide with other researchers and a growing body
of citizens concerned with the transformation of our nation from a Constitutional
Republic to a participatory democracy. She has traveled the United States
and lived overseas.